There are two kinds of losses: the kind that count in the standings but are wiped from memory when the scoreboard resets the next day and the kind that leave holes big enough to sink a team's season.The Orioles left Yankee Stadium after Friday night's 14-4 bashing at the hands of the newly christened "Baby Yankees" hoping to have suffered only the former. Center fielder Adam Jones' second-inning departure with a left hamstring strain made the latter possible.Either way, you'll be hard pressed to find a worse Orioles inning than Friday's second. After third baseman Manny Machado and Yankees first baseman Mark Teixeira (Mount Saint Joseph) traded home runs in a first inning that ended with a 2-1 Orioles deficit, the visitors threatened before a telling inning-ending sequence.With two outs and runners on second and third for reserve catcher Francisco Pena, Nolan Reimold stepped on deck for Jones, who had started the game and taken one at-bat Friday after being lifted for a pinch hitter because of a hamstring cramp in the ninth inning of Thursday's loss to the Washington Nationals.After the game, Orioles manager Buck Showalter said it was more of the same feeling for the steady center fielder, who aggravated the hamstring running out a dribbler to third base on the first at-bat of the day."Had a real good day today, felt good, was running around good," Showalter said. "The first play, the swinging bunt, the field was wet early on. They put the water on it. He said he thought he'd be all right, went out to center field. I just didn't like the way he was moving around, and I decided not to take a chance with it."Said Jones: "Didn't get to first base in as ample time as I wanted. Came out of the game, so something must have not felt great. Took me out of my element. [If] I ain't got my legs as a center fielder, what more do you have?"In his place went Nolan Reimold, who helped contribute to starter Yovani Gallardo's shortest career start. Gallardo imploded in a six-run second inning and was pulled after recording just one out, his struggles compounded by a line drive Reimold dropped. By the end of the inning, the Orioles trailed 8-1.Jones said he put Reimold "in a peculiar situation."Showalter said he doesn't expect Jones to go on the disabled list, and said they'll "continue to look from within" for a possible addition to the roster to spell Jones if he needs more than a few days off.Their one true backup for him is rookie Joey Rickard, who hasn't played since the Orioles last left here in late July with a torn ligament in his right thumb. Reimold had 64 innings of experience in center field before Friday, and the only player on the 40-man roster with center-field experience is Triple-A outfielder Dariel Alvarez.If the Orioles want to add someone to the 40-man roster, they could add Chris Dickerson, Julio Borbon, L.J. Hoes, Xavier Avery or Mike Yastrzemski. Each might be a defensive upgrade over Reimold, and might might also approximate his .225 batting average.That's not to say Jones won't bounce back quickly. He's played through tweaks and twinges and been one of the more consistent Orioles batters all season, taking to the leadoff position quite well: a .301/.333/.506 batting line with 19 home runs and 55 RBIs in 80 games entering Friday.Overall, he's batting .277 with a .773 OPS and 24 home runs this season, and has played the last few months at full strength.He missed some time in the first week of the season with a back problem and scuffled out of the gate, but has been as durable as they come since. It wasn't hard to believe Jones on Thursday night when he emphatically said he'd play Friday, and Showalter said he believed Jones would be politicking his way into the lineup Saturday, whether he felt ready or not."Let's try and get this correct and make that big push," Jones said. "At this point in time in the season, missing more than a few games would hurt this team."jmeoli@baltsun.comtwitter.com/JonMeoli